Youth Street Outreach
In 2010, YSO was one of 11 nationally recognized programs to participate in a study to measure the program's impact on street youth.
Youth Street Outreach (YSO) workers hit the streets of greater Omaha, looking for youth in crisis. They carry backpacks filled with basic needs and emergency supplies and patrol areas where homeless and at-risk youth tend to congregate. Outreach workers are trained to identify a young person in need and to provide immediate information and services.
Depending on the weather, YSO patrols downtown Omaha, Council Bluffs and other parts of the metro area four to five days per week. YES outreach workers wear t-shirts or sweatshirts which clearly identify them as YSO workers.
Outreach workers invite homeless and street-dependent youth, ages 12 to 21, to the YES Drop-In Center. Youth are welcome to this safe place to have a meal, shower, do laundry and meet other young people. The facility is open between 3 and 9 p.m. The staff is available for emotional support and to assist youth in other areas such as:
- Education planning
- Job searching
- Crisis intervention
- Advocacy
- Problem solving
- Computer access
A registered nurse from the Visiting Nurse Association is on staff three days a week at the Drop-In Center. In addition to basic health counseling, she can provide HIV, STD and pregnancy testing along with prevention counseling and parenting classes.
YSO assisted 712 youth in 2010-11, and found shelter for 152 of those youth.
Safe Place
The YES Youth Street Outreach program is an affiliate of the National Safe Place initiative. Safe Place is a program that recruits local businesses to serve as Safe Place sites. For more information about the Safe Place initiative, visit www.nationalsafeplace.org or call (402) 578-SAFE.
Youth Street Outreach Wish List